Coastal erosion is the wearing away of land and removal of beach sediments by wave action, tidal currents, and other processes. Coasts are classified as primary, shaped by land erosion, or secondary, shaped by marine agents. Erosional coasts experience active erosion while depositional coasts experience sediment accumulation from rivers or oceans. Waves, tides, currents, and coastal dynamics shape shorelines through erosion, transportation, and deposition, forming landforms like sea stacks, arches, caves, spits, barrier islands, and deltas. The rate of coastal destruction varies depending on slope, wave intensity, wind, and human activities and can damage habitats.